Part One
Living on the Flower
Bed of Eden
“You are living on the Flower Bed of Eden!”
Andrew Howard to Little Sara, age five
Arkansas,
1962
The Flower Bed of Eden
Arkansas, February 13, 1987
Thunder
rattled the windowpanes two stories high, and lightning split the sky; it was
as if the whole world was in turmoil that night. My nerves were keyed up as
tight as piano strings, and in a sudden moment of stillness and silence it felt
as though my heartbeat was amplified ten times over. He was over a hundred
pounds greater than I, nearly a foot taller, and I knew he could move his
muscled body into unbelievable sprints.
Rain started falling in torrents, while the storm raged outside. I was
not afraid of the storms of nature; it was the storm inside this night that I
knew I might not survive.
Anticipation
was so great that I wanted to scream at him to get it over with, and true to my
expectation he lunged for me, and my body did not disappoint me, I flew down
the stairs two at a time in my bare feet. He stalled for mere seconds to enjoy
his pronouncement of a death sentence upon me:
“I AM GOING TO KILL YOU-YOU GOOD FOR
NOTHING BITCH-STONE DEAD!” He
screamed.
It was
February 13, of the year 1987, the night that I disappeared into a February
rainstorm with five children and no place to go. I was twenty-nine years old.
Many people
asked of me since that day, many ‘whys’ and I gave many answers. It takes a lot
of ‘why’s’ to make a life, mine being no exception. Maya Angelou said ‘you
can’t know who I am until you know where I have been’; until you know the
circumstances and people who contributed to the making of me, you cannot know
me. We all are complicated mixes of many other people and life events. We are
all of everything that has ever happened to us. If we suddenly got amnesia, we
would cease to exist as who we were, except in the memory of others. My pain is
me, and thus my life that once was, is what made me now. I am the
hungry little girl who sat in the sand over sixty years ago waiting to be
rescued by an ancient old man. I am Sara Niles, and this is my story.
The Deep South, 1957
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